| Literature DB >> 32299397 |
Quinn M Biggs1, Robert J Ursano2, Jing Wang2, Gary H Wynn2, Russell B Carr2,3, Carol S Fullerton2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and sleep problems are highly related. The relationship between nighttime sleep characteristics and next day post traumatic stress symptoms (PTSS) is not well known. This study examined the relationship between the previous night's sleep duration, number of awakenings, sleep quality, trouble falling asleep, and difficulty staying asleep and PTSS the following day.Entities:
Keywords: Ecological momentary assessment; Military personnel; Post-traumatic stress disorder; Sleep; Symptom assessment
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32299397 PMCID: PMC7164146 DOI: 10.1186/s12888-020-02550-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Psychiatry ISSN: 1471-244X Impact factor: 3.630
Sample Demographics and Descriptive Statistics, N = 61
| Categorical variable | % ( |
|---|---|
| Gender | |
| Male | 54.1 (33) |
| Female | 45.9 (28) |
| Race | |
| White | 63.9 (39) |
| Others | 36.1 (22) |
| Education | |
| High school or G.E.D | 4.9 (3) |
| Some college/technical school | 47.5 (29) |
| Bachelor’s degree | 21.3 (13) |
| Graduate degree | 26.2 (16) |
| Marital Status | |
| Currently married | 57.4 (35) |
| Not currently married | 42.6 (26) |
| Continuous variable | |
| Age (range = 22–76) | 38.6 (12.1) |
| PTSS (0–180) | 67.1 (39.0) |
| Sleep | |
| Sleep duration (0–13) | 5.3 (2.0) |
| Number of awakenings (0–16) | 2.6 (2.1) |
| Sleep quality (0–3) | 1.4 (0.8) |
| Trouble falling asleep (0–1) | 0.53 (0.38) |
| Difficulty staying asleep (0–1) | 0.36 (0.30) |
Predicting Next Day’s PTSS by Previous Night’s Sleep Characteristics
| Sleep characteristics | CI | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Univariate sleep characteristicsa | |||
| Sleep duration | |||
| Person mean | −7.10 | [−14.59, 0.390] | .063 |
| Last nightb | −1.45 | [−2.18, −0.73] | <.001 |
| Number of awakenings | |||
| Person mean | 1.03 | [−4.84, 6.88] | .727 |
| Last night | 0.70 | [−0.07, 1.47] | .073 |
| Sleep quality | |||
| Person mean | −18.98 | [−42.34, 4.38] | .109 |
| Last night | −2.82 | [−4.42, −1.23] | <.001 |
| Trouble falling asleep | |||
| Person mean | 41.52 | [12.35, 70.69] | .006 |
| Last night | 10.54 | [5.99, 15.09] | <.001 |
| Difficulty staying asleepc | |||
| Person mean | 73.99 | [31.63, 116.35] | .001 |
| Last night | 18.73 | [13.68, 23.78] | <.001 |
| Multivariate sleep characteristicsd | |||
| Sleep duration | |||
| Person mean | −2.28 | [−9.96, 5.41] | .555 |
| Last night | −0.93 | [−1.73, −0.12] | .024 |
| Sleep quality | |||
| Person mean | −6.91 | [−29.72, 15.91] | .546 |
| Last night | 0.41 | [−1.45, 2.27] | .667 |
| Trouble falling asleep | |||
| Person mean | 21.74 | [−10.51, 54.00] | .182 |
| Last night | 5.65 | [0.92, 10.39] | .019 |
| Difficulty staying asleep | |||
| Person mean | 53.95 | [6.98, 100.93] | .025 |
| Last night | 16.61 | [11.16, 22.06] | <.001 |
Note. aSingle variable analysis adjusted for demographic covariates. bThe partitioned last night variable was created as the difference between the person mean and the last night. cRandom slope was tested for each sleep characteristic and there was a significant random slope of difficulty staying asleep, and the corresponding fixed effects (person mean = 71. 34, p = .001, and last night = 17.69, p < .001) were similar to the model without the random slope. dPerson mean and last night variables of sleep quality were not statistically significant and were removed from the final model. The model included sleep duration, trouble falling asleep, difficulty staying asleep, and demographic covariates
Fig. 1Next Day’s PTSS Predicted by the Previous Night’s Sleep Duration, Sleep Quality, Trouble Falling Asleep, and Difficulty Staying Asleep. Note. Least squares means of PTSS, adjusted for demographic characteristics and within-subjects correlations, estimated for each sleep variable with various levels of last night measures, shown as horizontal variables and stratified by different person mean measures. For sleep quality, the four lines of person mean measures reflect the four response options from 0 (Very bad) to 3 (Very good). For sleep duration, trouble falling asleep, and difficulty staying asleep, the three lines of person mean measures reflect the grand mean and one standard deviation above or below the grand mean. The grand means were 5.3, 1.4, 0.53, and 0.36 for sleep duration, sleep quality, trouble falling asleep, and difficulty staying asleep